Armstrong heads to Pyrenees

PERPIGNAN, France -- Heading into the Pyrenees for what should be the decisive final mountain stages of the Tour de France, Lance Armstrong had three reasons to be a very happy man.

First, he was on course for title No. 3, after a stunning performance in the Alps that left his rivals in awe and in despair.

Second and third, he will soon be the father of twin girls.

Armstrong found out the twins' gender after his triumph in the mountain time-trial at Chamrousse. His wife, Kristin, brought him an envelope containing ultrasound test results and they opened it together.

''I didn't expect two girls,'' Armstrong said. ''The easy expectation is one boy, one girl. My second expectation was two boys.

''It's a beautiful surprise. Perfect.''

Armstrong already is the father of toddler Luke. A survivor of advanced testicular cancer, he underwent treatments that made him sterile but banked his sperm beforehand. His wife, who is due to give birth in December, became pregnant through in vitro fertilization.

Armstrong had a day to dwell on the good news before the next stage of his title campaign.

On Thursday, the first of two rest days during the three-week Tour, riders were flown from Grenoble, at the foot of the Alps, to this southwestern city close to the Pyrenees.

Armstrong was photographed and filmed by TV cameras for much of the flight, but smiled and looked relaxed in the company of rival teams and reporters.

Stepping off the plane, he briefed journalists on his plans for the rest of the day: ''Ride, eat and sleep.''

The race resumes on Friday with a 103.4-mile stretch from Perpignan to Ax-les-Thermes, 4,538 feet high in the Pyrenees. The next two stages, ending at Pla d'Adet and Luz-Ardiden, are similarly difficult mountain legs.

''Pla d'Adet is the hardest of the three,'' Armstrong said. ''The hardest, the longest, with the most climbs. But Luz-Ardiden is also a dangerous day.''

The principal danger for Armstrong is possible fatigue left over from the Alps, where he won at L'Alpe d'Huez and Chamrousse. He claimed similar mountain wins to spark his two title charges.

''You can only do efforts like that so many times in a three-week race,'' he said. ''The last two Tours, there's been a pattern: Sestrieres, Hautacam. But at some point in those Tours, I paid the price.

''This year, having done big efforts, I have to be very aware that there's a chance that I could pay the price again.''

For now, he has a margin of error. He is third overall, but Francois Simon -- who holds the leader's yellow jersey -- and second-place Andrei Kivilev are not expected to do well in the remaining mountain stages.

He leads his main rival, Germany's Jan Ullrich, by 3 minutes, 34 seconds, a big advantage.

If Armstrong can extend his lead in the mountains, he is almost certain to win the Tour for the third time in a row. The six stages after the Pyrenees are unlikely to see much change in the standings, barring sickness or accidents.

''We're not going to start each stage in the Pyrenees with the objective to win the stage,'' said Armstrong. ''From now on, the objective is to take the yellow jersey.''